No one knows the exact date of Catherine Howard’s birth, but it was probably sometime between 1520 and 1525. She was the niece of the powerful Duke of Norfolk. She was also cousin to Anne Boleyn, Henry VIII’s second wife.

Catherine went to court as a lady-in-waiting to Queen Anne of Cleves. The king had already decided that he did not like Anne, and he soon fell in love with the young Catherine. He had his marriage annulled on July 9, 1540. He and Catherine were secretly married on July 28.

For the first year of the marriage everything seemed to go well. Henry was happy. He enjoyed his new queen’s youth and energy, and he bought her many expensive gifts. He called her his “rose without a thorn.”

However, Catherine had secrets in her past. She had an affair with Francis Dereham before she went to court, and Dereham thought of her as his wife. When Catherine was made queen she appointed Dereham as her secretary. She had also been engaged to Thomas Culpepper, one of the king’s men. Some believed they were still having an affair.

Thomas Cranmer, the archbishop of Canterbury, found out about Catherine’s history with Dereham, and he told the king. Henry was furious. He passed a law that said it was treason for someone to marry a king when she had previously been engaged to someone else. Two days after the law was passed, on February 13, 1542, Catherine was beheaded at the Tower of London.

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